Re: Slippery
Slope
Posted by S. on February 12, 2003
In Reply to: Re: Slippery Slope posted by
ESC on February 12, 2003
: : Hello, I was just hoping some one
might know who came up with the phrase "slippery slope". Thanks for any assistance.
:
I haven't found the origin. But I'm close.
: THE SLIPPERY SLOPE - "The broad
and easy way 'that leadeth to destruction.' See also AVERNUS." The Avernus entry
talks about a lake in Italy "that its sulphurous exhalations caused any bird that
attempted to fly over it to fall into its waters." From "Brewer's Dictionary of
Phrase and Fable" revised by Adrian Room (HarperCollinsPublishers, New York, 1999,
Sixteenth Edition).
: From online:
: "Fallacy: Slippery Slope : Also Known
as: The Camel's Nose.
: Description of Slippery Slope : The Slippery Slope
is a fallacy in which a person asserts that some event must inevitably follow
from another without any argument for the inevitability of the event in question.
In most cases, there are a series of steps or gradations between one event and
the one in question and no reason is given as to why the intervening steps or
gradations will simply be bypassed. This "argument" has the following form:
:
Event X has occurred (or will or might occur). : Therefore event Y will inevitably
happen.
: This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious because there is no reason
to believe that one event must inevitably follow from another without an argument
for such a claim. This is especially clear in cases in which there is a significant
number of steps or gradations between one event and another."
: From the Nizkor
Project at http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/slippery-slope.html Accessed
February 11, 2003.
Thanks a whole lot.
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